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FRIDAY | MARCH 9, 2012
SPORTS Page 5 Bears victorious
NEWS Page 3
Men defeat Kansas State with 82-74 victory in Big 12 Championship tournament
Vol. 113 No. 30
Building the community
A&E Page 4
Game of the week
Habitat for Humanity welcomes “NASCAR Thunder 2003” races to volunteers to help build local houses the front of the line in the latest during spring break Great Video Game series entry © 2012, Baylor University
In Print >> Lipstick saves lives
MAC Cosmetics uses funds from spring campaign to help AIDS victims
Page 4
>> Bears rule the court
Lady Bears dominate Texas Tech with 72-48 win, sending them to semifinals in the tournament
Page 5 >> Blogging the bands
Student’s class project brings inside look into Baylor’s Golden Wave Marching Band and Courtside Players
Page 3
Viewpoints “It seems that we have gotten too caught up in what the test scores are supposed to mean and have failed to make sure that the tests and testing system are as accurate as they possibly can be. This problem affects students’ pocketbooks, their college experiences and, most importantly, their futures.” Page 2
Bear Briefs The place to go to know the places to go
When you come back Baylor baseball will play Texas Tech from 1:05 to 4:05 p.m. March 18 at Baylor Ballpark. Tickets can be purchased at the box office of the Bill Daniel Student Center or at www.baylorbears.com.
Hear the voices singing
A Cappella Choir, conducted by Alan Raines, will hold a concert at 7:30 p.m. March 20 in Jones Concert hall of the Glennis McCrary Music Building. The choir will perform with an 11-piece string orchestra. This event is free and open to the public.
Need for feed
The Baylor Lariat has set up a new sports Twitter feed @BULariatSports. Follow us for live updates on this week’s basketball tournament in Kansas City and in future home games.
baylorlariat.com
Student Senate supports DREAM act By Daniel C. Houston
Staff Writer
The Student Senate approved a controversial bill Thursday encouraging the Baylor administration to publicly advocate for providing certain classes of illegal immigrants a pathway to citizenship. SR 59-18, which passed 2520 after more than an hour of contentious debate, calls on the administration to “compose an official university stance” in support of the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act. The DREAM Act is a bill filed by congress that would grant conditional permanent residency to illegal immigrants who entered the country before the age of 15 and have either earned a high school-equivalent degree or en-
Police arrest students
rolled at an institution of higher learning in the U.S. Malcolm Ladines, senior senator from Plano and co-author of Thursday’s bill, said he expected a close outcome because not all the senators agree on the subject of immigration reform. “It was a really close vote, and I know a lot of it was tight partially because of political stances that were brought into this debate,” Ladines said. “I think we need to keep in mind our students and those who might not be able to voice their opinions.” Although Ladines and fellow co-author Cody Brasher, junior senator from Birmingham, Ala., cited census data and research from the Pew Hispanic Center in their bill, they acknowledged they did not extensively survey Baylor students before introducing it. Several of the bill’s detrac-
tors, including Sugar Land junior senator Cody Orr, justified their criticism by suggesting student government should gather more student opinion before making a statement about a controversial political measure. “This [proposal] does not represent the voice and the opinion of students,” Orr said. “This represents the voice and opinion of less than 52 people who think that they know what students want without asking students what they want.” But Katy senior senator Shaun Wysong said a majority of student opinion should not carry when it could potentially marginalize other groups of students, including illegal immigrants. “Honestly, it doesn’t really matter if the bulk of the student body supports this or not,” Wysong said. “Even if the major-
Suspects charged with alcohol-related crimes on Tuesday By Rob Bradfield Staff Writer
Late-night celebrations led to the arrest of five Baylor students Tuesday night. Waco police responded to complaints from residents of the neighborhood between campus and 18th Street at about 11:30 p.m. Tuesday. Sgt. W. Patrick Swanton of the Waco Police Department said residents reported several young men running around the neighborhood, banging on doors and running away. “Witnesses stated that there were several males running around in the nude,” Swanton said. Waco police stopped a black Chevrolet pickup matching the description and license plate number provided by witnesses on the 1100 block of Wood Avenue. Officers arrested five students. Swanton said all five students were found to be intoxicated, and the driver was charged with a DWI. Two students in the car were under 21 and charged with public intoxication. The remaining two students were charged with providing alcohol to a minor. The driver was detained and posted $5,000 bond. Baylor Police Chief Jim Doak said Baylor is aware of the situation, but the university has yet to take any action against the students. “Our police were over at the scene with [the Waco police], but this was their arrest,” Doak said. Swanton said charges have not been brought against the five for public indecency. When officers stopped the truck, all five were clothed, and none of the witnesses has pressed charges against the students. Swanton said the police department is treating the initial incident as “a prank gone awry,” and the department’s main concern was the students’ actions after they put their clothes back on. “The issue is when you get into a vehicle and put others at risk,” Swanton said.
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Associated Press
Bruce Springsteen performs during the 54th annual Grammy Awards Feb. 12 in Los Angeles. Springsteen will perform at the annual South by Southwest Conference and Festival in Austin.
ity is against this, we disparage the rights and the beliefs and the privileges of those who are already at this university and pointing at them and saying, ‘You matter less than us just because of circumstances you cannot control.’” But some senators were also concerned about the impact passing the DREAM Act could have on economic growth and immigration patterns. Dallas freshman Connor Mighell opposed SR 59-18, arguing it would promote illegal activity by making illegal immigrants eligible for taxpayer-funded programs including federal student loans and work-study. “I will not support a bill which asks Baylor to throw its support behind an act with this many gaping flaws that rewards and encourages illegal behavior,” Mighell said.
Frisco senior senator T.J. Blease said he believes the DREAM Act would help the U.S. remain competitive in international labor markets. He said a policy of educating immigrants in the country only to force them to leave once they would be able to work for American companies and organizations “makes no sense” to him. Student government officials will distribute the passed bill to administrators in the hopes they will consider adopting a public stance on the DREAM Act as they did during the 2011 Texas legislative session supporting funding for the Tuition Equalization Grant and fighting against allowing concealed handguns on Baylor’s campus. The act is currently pending in the U.S Senate judiciary committee.
By Jake Coyle Associated Press
el discussions, countless predictions and even man vs. machine competitions that pit algorithms against curators. “It’s like stepping into a temporary world for one week where you’re maybe two or three or five years in the future,” says Amber Case, who’ll be making her fourth trip to SXSW as a keynote speaker for Interactive. She’s a “cyborg anthropolo-
SXSW buzzword: convergence
NEW YORK — Increasingly, the media zoo that is SXSW looks more like today’s overlapping media world. The annual South by Southwest Conference and Festival, which begins today, gathers thousands of creators, performers, media and industry members for 10 days onto the boozy downtown streets of Austin. It’s really three festivals — Interactive, Film and Music — in one, but each bleeds into the other. The annual buzzword at SXSW is always convergence. Just as the tech and entertainment worlds physically descend onto Austin, media forms, too, are diverging. Many of those technologies and companies that might be found at SXSW Interactive have greatly altered those at SXSW Film (videoon-demand, Netflix, Hulu) and at SXSW Music (Apple, Spotify, Pandora). It’s a place where the question is always “what’s next” and one has the impression of meandering hordes traipsing the streets of Austin searching for answers to a confusing and ever-evolving media landscape. There will be hundreds of pan-
Don’t have $750 to spare? The Lariat has your ticket to SXSW. Look for photos and event coverage from Lariat staff throughout the week online at baylorlariat.com.
gist” who studies the relationship between humans and machines, and founded the location-sharing platform Geoloqi.com. Each realm of SXSW will have its own superstars. None will be bigger than Bruce Springsteen, this year’s music keynote speaker. (NPR Music and SXSW. com will live stream the event.) SEE
SXSW, page 6
BU biblical research shown in Vatican By Kayla Reeves Reporter
Baylor researchers are bringing biblical history to life in Vatican City this Easter season. Dr. Scott Carroll, research professor in manuscript studies and biblical tradition at the Baylor Institute for Studies of Religion, is the director of a 5,000-square-foot exhibit of rare religious artifacts at the Vatican. The exhibit is intended to bring together people of many faiths that have a common history, and Carroll has been working on it for more than a year. The exhibit is composed of more than 150 religious texts and artifacts from the Green Collection —the largest private collection of religious relics in the world — and from the Vatican Museum and other private collections. The exhibit is set up in a series of highly detailed rooms “meant to immerse you in the dramatic story told by this one-of-a-kind assemblage of items,” Carroll
Courtesy
Representatives of interfaith organizations gathered in Vatican Radio Hall to announce the opening of Verbum Domini, an exhibit of rare biblical artifacts in Vatican City that celebrates Catholic, Protestant, Jewish and Orthodox contributions to history’s most indestructible book - the Bible. (from left, Monsignor Sanchez de Toda, Father Theodore Mascarenhas, Steve Green and Dr. Scott Carroll.
wrote in an email to the Lariat.
TheLariat
For example, there are rooms rep-
licating the caves where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found, and Westminster Abbey’s Jerusalem Chamber, where the King James Version of the Bible was translated. The items on display show the resilience of the Bible in times of great persecution, Carroll said. These items include scrolls that survived the Spanish Inquisition and texts burned by Nazis during the Holocaust. The exhibit is called Verbum Domini, which means “Word of the Lord” in Latin. The exhibit embodies Pope Benedict XVI’s hope to renew people’s passion for reading God’s word, Carroll said, and it displays the shared traditions and biblical history of Jewish, Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox faiths. Dr. David Jeffrey, distinguished professor of literature and humanities, has been working with the Green Collection at Baylor for more than a year and gave a lecture about the research SEE
VATICAN, page 6
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